The Phnom Penh Post

‘HK turmoil may boost Singapore’

-

HONG Kong’s reputation as a stable financial hub has been shaken by a controvers­ial extraditio­n bill that prompted massive protests, and its loss might just be Singapore’s gain, experts say.

The Chinese territor y and t he South Asian cit y-state have long v ied for t he tit le of Asia’s top financia l destinatio­n, attracting internatio­na l business from around the world.

But a decision by Hong Kong’s Beijing-backed government to introduce a bill a llow ing extraditio­n to the mainland sparked concern among the business community and brought up to t wo million protesters into t he st reet.

Hong Kong’s polit ica l crisis is “definitely a dent in its reputation,” said Lawrence Loh, director of the Centre for Governance, Institutio­ns and Organisati­ons at t he National Universit y of Singapore’s Business School.

“There will be some immediate benefits [for Singapore],” he added, pointing to reports t hat t ycoons were a lready shifting money from Hong Kong.

Hong Kong offers access to China but enjoys freedoms unseen in the mainland, under the terms of its 1997 handover from Britain to Beijing.

It has a large expatriate community and prides itself on its reputation as a financial capital in the region.

But its status is temporary – the handover agreement expires in 2047 – and in recent years there has been increasing concern about Beijing’s influence.

Companies were unsettled not only by the massive demonstrat­ions,

but also by the proposed law, which they feared could undermine Hong Kong’s reputation as a safe place to do business.

Opponents of the proposal worry it will entangle people in China’s notoriousl­y opaque and politicise­d justice system, and threaten those critical of Beijing’s policies.

“Enacting such an open-ended law by fiat will only drive business to places like Singapore,” Richard Harris, chief executive of Port Shelter Investment, wrote in Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post.

‘Sovereignt­y on its side’

The territory’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam has now suspended the bill, but she has declined so far to fully wit hdraw it from considerat­ion.

And that uncertaint­y could mean firms looking for a first-time base in the region will lean away from Hong Kong and towards Singapore, said David Webb, a Hong Kong-based investor who advocates for stronger corporate governance.

“If you are considerin­g doing it [opening an office] for the first time … then you would probably look at the potential for these laws to be resurrecte­d,” he said.

Singapore has sought to promote itself as a less crowded, more orderly alternativ­e to Hong Kong, though it is sometimes mocked as dull and criticised for its restrictio­ns on civil liberties.

The media is tight ly controlled and rights groups say financiall­y ruinous defamation suits are used to silence critics and politica l opponents.

“Singapore is not known as a bastion of free speech but it does have sovereignt­y on its side,” Webb said.

The city-state has also built a reputation for a strong rule of law – key in attracting businesses – and a growing number of foreign companies come to Singapore to settle commercial disputes.

The Singapore Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n Centre, one of several similar centres around the world, received over 400 cases last year and has seen its case-load increase four-fold over the past decade.

In Hong Kong by contrast, critics say the extraditio­n bill is the latest sign that a traditiona­lly sound legal system is being eroded as Beijing seeks to assert greater control.

Still, any shift away from Hong Kong is likely to be more of a trickle than a flood, experts said.

“Investors in mainland China will still prefer Hong Kong over Singapore due to prox imit y,” noted Abhineet Kaul of consultanc­y Frost & Sullivan.

“I do not believe that the uncertaint­y and loss of confidence has reached a tipping point where you will see the floodgates open,” Loh added.

 ?? ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP ?? Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam (left) chats with Singaporea­n Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong during a call at Istana presidenti­al palace on in Singapore in 2017.
ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam (left) chats with Singaporea­n Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong during a call at Istana presidenti­al palace on in Singapore in 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia